On the whole, the characters in these stories are ordinary folk, making their weary way somewhere in the Styx, whether suburban or rural. Only in the last story in the collection, Seventy Two Derwents, does Kennedy try a different technique. In every case the author works a conjuror's miracle, but each variation on the theme can't quite reinstate the baffled thrill you feel on seeing it first time around. In many cases, it seems clear that the inspiration for a story has come from a wry, oblique take on the standard English usage of a word or set of words: "the let-down reflex" in Five Dollar Family, "the front" in Laminex And Mirrors, "white spirit" in the story of the same name. The characters are all grippingly authentic, the situations are real, terrible, and thundering emotional truths are spoken. Each describes a kind of psychological turning point for a character, a crisis, a resolution. Partly this may be because the modus operandi is, in 14 out of 15 cases, precisely the same. But all together in one place, they somehow lose their impact. Each of the stellar stories in Australian Cate Kennedy's new collection, Like A House On Fire, would anthologise well, outshine anything else in a literary journal and likely clean up in most short-story competitions. In literature, as in everything else, it is possible to have too much of a good thing. Like A House On Fire by Cate Kennedy (Scribe $35)
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